Before the Covid-19 pandemic crisis few Kenyans had heard of Dr
Rashid Aman, the Chief Administrative Secretary in the Ministry of
Health. The official went about his duties for two years, largely
avoiding the limelight, save for a few low-key events where he
represented former Health Cabinet Secretary (CS) Sicily Kariuki.
Then
came the pandemic and his status changed from a shadow figure at Afya
House to the face of Kenya’s coronavirus fight alongside his colleagues
Dr Mercy Mwangangi and Health CS Mutahi Kagwe.
Dr Aman
has emerged as a voice of reason during his briefings, tirelessly urging
the citizenry to adhere to containment measures provided by the
ministry. It has of course helped that he expertly employs a gentle tone
even when he is admonishing Kenyans for flouting the simple guidelines.
Unlike
one of his colleagues whose frustration at such careless disregard for
health safety by the public is often evident in the briefings, Dr Aman
has remained stoic imploring Kenyans to do better.
It
was evident from the start of the crisis that Dr Aman, a researcher by
profession, was a leader who is rarely swayed by public sentiments, but
leans on logic to make decisions. This was exemplified in February
during a press conference which followed a public uproar regarding the
arrival of a 239-passenger jet from China. The arrival, only made public
by a Kenya Airways whistleblower, was of great public health concern,
considering that China was the epicentre of the health crisis.
Dr Aman, however stood his ground and said flights and
passengers from China were still rightly allowed to enter the country,
noting that it would be discriminatory not to allow in the Chinese
because a virus could be imported from any part of the world. Not
yielding to public demand to lock out Chinese flights, Dr Aman proposed
that “a more scientific approach was required in dealing with the
virus”. His logic later proved sound when Kenya reported its first
Covid-19 case— a woman who travelled back to Nairobi from the United
States via London, United Kingdom on March 5.
It is the
same reasoned thinking that saw him emerge unscathed when he later
courted more controversy when, aware that only 11 isolation beds were
available in the country, he said they (government) were trusting on the
“goodwill” of the Chinese people to self-quarantine.
Besides
urging Kenyans to do their part to flatten the curve, which essentially
means lowering new infections, Dr Amani has been at the forefront of
the Covid-19 battle, co-ordinating efforts between the national and
county government, tackling testing kits shortage in collaboration with
his teammates.
He has repeatedly guided tours to
hotspots in several counties to ensure that testing for the respiratory
disease was taking place.
Amid the search for a
Covid-19 vaccine, Dr Aman has been championing a home-grown solution.
Rather than look to the West for solutions, he has at every turn
challenged Kenyan scientists to step up and be counted.
And
it appears they have taken up the challenge going by Tuesdays reports
when the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) said it had managed to
identify at least nine strains of the coronavirus, which is expected to
help in narrowing down to a vaccine.
“This pandemic is
an opportunity to uplift the level of science a notch higher in this
country,” Dr Aman is reported as saying during a courtesy call.
Dr
Aman is a distinguished scientist himself. He is a trained pharmacist
from the University of Nairobi, holds a PhD in pharmaceutical chemistry
from University of California and also has a postdoctoral fellowship
from Stanford University.
The official, who turns 62 on
Monday, is also well-published in the research world and has vast
experience in management and consultancy. He is also an honorary
research professor at Strathmore University.
He is an entrepreneur as well having founded the Centre for Drug Management and the African Centre for Clinical Trials.
He
has served on boards of several institutions including the Kenya
National Museums where he is credited with developing its human capital,
boosting its molecular genetic study capacity as well as infectious
agents.
Dr Aman was appointed to the Ministry of Health
(MoH) in January 2018 where he has served, surviving the purge in a
January reshuffle. He remained put, probably, a sign that he is a prized
asset at the Health docket.
He was instrumental in
enforcing Covid-19 regulations during Islam’s Holy Month of Ramadhan
when on several occasions he took a moment to deliver a personalised
message to fellow faithful urging them to stop convening in groups while
breaking the fast as is tradition.
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